According to a pair of
industry reports, 2017 was the safest year in the history of commercial
aviation. That’s a remarkable feat considering commercial air transportation
traffic was up 3 percent from 2016, and as such, according to aviation
consultants To70, the fatal accident rate dropped to just one fatal accident
for every 16 million flights.
As the aviation industry
celebrated this milestone, President Donald Trump took to Twitter, presumably
during or after a cable news report on the data this morning, and claimed
credit for this feat.
Needless to say, many
industry experts instantly disagreed with Trump’s tweet and asked for any
evidence that supports his vague statement. They shouldn’t hold their breath,
though.
Trump’s claim to have been
strict on commercial aviation is a head-scratcher, seeing as his goal has been
to make “big changes” to aviation by relaxing “burdensome” regulations,
as he promised in a meeting with airline executives early last year.
He also signed an executive order that requires federal agencies to
eliminate two existing regulations for every new one, and as such the FAA’s
Regulatory Reform Task Force investigated potentially “outdated, unnecessary,
or ineffective” regulations, while also accepting recommendations from other
entities. This resulted in an industry panel targeting “dozens of
safety rules” for elimination or revision.
The president has also
been a staunch supporter of ATC privatization, of which opponents have
argued the transition of the nation’s air traffic control system from the FAA
to a nonprofit corporate entity will take several years and cost billions of
dollars, upending progress made on modernization.
But what’s most bizarre
about Trump’s claim is that the two reports regard worldwide commercial
aviation. He has nothing to do with such success. Additionally, as many
aviation experts have pointed out since this morning’s tweet, there hasn’t been
a fatality resulting from a U.S.-scheduled airline crash since 2009. That’s
something that experts and officials attribute to the continued efforts of many
people, as mentioned in this Aviation Safety Network report.
(Evangle Luo of TTFLY shared with you)
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